US told not to politicize trade issue By Dai Yan (China Daily) Updated: 2006-02-15 06:30
China is willing to work with the United States to seek a balance in their
trade, but it will not help if political elements are embedded in the issue, a
top Chinese legislator said Tuesday.
Cheng Siwei, vice-chairman of the Standing Committee of the National People's
Congress, said China and the United States should ease frictions in their trade
ties and find a win-win solution through consultations.
"We are equal partners and we should deal with the problem calmly Don't
politicize it," Cheng told a Sino-US trade forum.
Cheng's remarks came amidst the backdrop of rising criticism against China in
the United States, which last week reported an all-time-high trade deficit of
US$725.8 billion for 2005. Congressmen are pressuring the Bush administration to
find fault with China, with which the United States registered an annual deficit
of US$201.6 billion, the largest ever recorded with a single country.
US senators Byron Dorgan and Lindsey Graham introduced legislation last week
to repeal the normal trade relations status between the two countries.
The US Congress granted China permanent normal trade relations status in
2000, paving the way for its entry to the World Trade Organization.
Another piece of legislation proposes to impose across-the-board tariffs of
27.5 per cent on Chinese imports unless Beijing revalues its currency.
Cheng admitted that China has a big trade surplus with the United States, but
clarified that it is not the country's aim.
"What we should bear in mind is that both sides reap benefits from trade
co-operation," he said.
He quoted a study by US investment bank Morgan Stanley estimating that US
consumers had saved US$600 billion in the past decade by buying cheaper goods
made in China.
China had also used a significant chunk of foreign exchange reserves, partly
earnings from its trade surplus, to buy US bonds. At the end of 2005, China held
US$300 billion in US treasury bonds.
Cheng called on the United States to help reduce its deficit with China by
relaxing restrictions on high-tech exports only 10 per cent of China's high-tech
imports come from the United States.
"I would say if you could sell a space shuttle to China, the situation would
be greatly improved," Cheng said. "That's a joke. But China has to be allowed to
buy more than Boeing airplanes."
Vice-Minister of Commerce Yi Xiaozhun told the forum that China had done a
lot to reduce the trade deficit, with imports from the United States witnessing
the highest growth in 2005.
China reported that its surplus with the United States last year was US$114.2
billion. Using different statistical standards caused the discrepancy with the
US figure.
(China Daily 02/15/2006 page1)
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